Malta Branch Office

A branch is one way for a company to set up a business in Malta. Opening a branch has many drawbacks, mainly that the foreign parent carries full liability for the branches operations and that lengthy and complicated dealings with the tax authorities may be needed regarding the branches tax obligations.

Opening a Malta Branch of a Foreign Company

The disadvantages of a branch office are:

The parent company is fully liable for the liabilities of the branch

The branches representatives may be held jointly and severally liable for tax debts

The financial statements of the parent must be lodged at the Companies Registry

The branches obligations are the same as the parent, including filing VAT returns, employees returns and corporation tax returns, so there are few savings in administering a branch

Banks and clients may prefer dealing with a Malta company rather than a foreign branch

A branch is rarely ideal for substantial projects because the parent company runs the entire risk

Upon registration of a branch, evidence has to be provided of the legal existence of the parent

Any public act by the branch, is likely to need ratification by the board of the foreign parent. A company that signs contracts in front of a notary on a regular basis, should incorporate for administrative ease

The advantages are:

Less obligations to present accounts than with corporations

Features of a branch office in Malta

A branch is usually an adequate vehicle for low cost projects. However, it is not the ideal choice for substantial projects because the parent company and branch offices activities are not differentiated, the parent company is fully liable for the branches liabilities.

From a tax point of view, branches are permanent establishments of non-resident companies and a Malta branch is not a separate legal company from its parent.

The branch must have the same name as the parent company.

A branch of a non-resident company must appoint a resident individual or a company to represent it in its dealings with the tax authorities. The representatives may be held jointly and severally liable for the tax debts of the permanent establishments of non-resident entities, which they represent.

To register a branch, evidence has to be provided of the existence of the parent, certified copies of the Articles or Statues, the names of the directors, the share capital, the registered office, and the names of the representatives who will act for you.

Various documents will need to be translated, the documents include:

Your parent's registration certificate

Your company's articles of association

The names of the company's directors and secretary

After your branch is registered

All stationery, order forms and similar documents used by your branch are required to show: